Site

Search Results

“The importance of spiritual warfare cannot be understated, especially in the modern secular era. While most people focus their attention on the guy that cut them off in traffic this morning, or the coworker that hums too loudly while filing TPS Reports, there is almost a total disregard for the supernatural realm. Whether people wish to believe in it or not, both the supernatural Good and Evil are a powerful part of their everyday lives and the struggle for their eternal soul.”

The importance of spiritual warfare cannot be understated, especially in the modern secular era. While most people focus their attention on the guy that cut them off in traffic this morning, or the coworker that hums too loudly while filing TPS Reports, there is almost a total disregard for the supernatural realm. Whether people wish to believe in it or not, both the supernatural Good and Evil are a powerful part of their everyday lives and the struggle for their eternal soul.

To truly understand the battle of Good and Evil one must look at the players involved. In the beginning God created all of the angels in Heaven, chief among them was named Lucifer. Lucifer decided that he should not have to bow to his Creator and instead wanted to be his own god. The view of making oneself our own personal god is the root of almost all sin. Rebellion against God and the very nature of Good to be self serving led Lucifer to wage war against God, ending in the defeat of himself and the angels who were loyal to him. Cast out of Heaven for all eternity, these demons with their leader (now referred to as the Devil) decided to continue their war against God by attacking His creation, humanity.

Through temptation and appeals to our fleshly desires, terror, and even possession, demons and the Devil work to pervert and lead astray as many men and women as possible from the Father. With Saint Michael the Archangel and the legions of angels loyal to God, the Church, our fellow believers, and the ever present protection and love from the Holy Trinity believers are given everything that is needed to live a righteous life, but the forces of darkness as Scripture says “prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour.”

Situated in south central Indiana, Bloomington is an idyllic place to visit, live and learn– but only if you don’t mind brazen Christianophobia.

Students for Life at Indiana University held a demonstration in Dunn Meadow as part of Students for Life of America‘s nationally organized Planned Parenthood Project tour. As is par for the course in IU-Bloomington, some Christianophobic behavior was quickly encountered. Two unidentified Christophobes, who are suspected to be IU-Bloomington students, confronted SFL students on Wednesday afternoon, and after a brief but tense exchange, one later returned to vandalize the demonstration site.

“You are in conflict with the world that I want, which is where all your churches burn, and all your trash fucking possible,” one Christianophobe threatened.

The glorious inconsistencies of Christianity are what make it unique, and are also what fire up some it’s most ardent opponents.

Any college student that has taken an America Studies class will probably hear this line in the first week of class, “Early Christianity was oppressive and cruel.” In a much quieter way, the student may also learn, but only by reading between the lines, that early Christianity in America was also one of the fundamental guiding forces which made us a City Upon a Hill.

The strict rules of the Christian faith explicitly forbid many things, but those restrictions also protect a greater number of freedoms which subsequently create the peace and civility which any society must have to succeed.

The trouble with Christianity is the commonest type of trouble, according to Christian writer G.K. Chesterton.

“The real trouble with this world of ours is not that it is an unreasonable world, nor even that it is a reasonable one,” Chesterton said. “The commonest kind of trouble is that it is nearly reasonable, but not quite. Life is not an illogicality; yet it is a trap for logicians.”

A couple weeks ago, TradWorker protested a pro-abortion radical feminist rally. Among several symbols we painted on “the rock” at the local university during the festivities after our successful action was the cross of Corneliu Codreanu’s Iron Guard and the Orthodox cross. This naturally raised the ire of the liberal hipsters in the Orthodox Christian community who are scrambling by the hundreds to sign up for a campaign to identify and excommunicate any and all White Nationalists from the Church.

The Toronto School of Theology’s vibrant and very ecumenical community is calling on Orthodox clergy to go on a hysterical witch hunt for absolutely any and all clergy who may have the slightest anti-globalist or pro-Southern sympathies. Co-signatures are reaching into the hundreds as layman and clergy alike scramble to get their name on the list of people less likely to find themselves strapped down to the lynch mob’s cucking stool. Read the rest of this entry →